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Anchor Recovery via ROV

Here are the moments the Endurance Array’s team Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) first spotted a giant pacific octopus, and when the ROV latched onto an anchor of a mooring that wasn’t properly releasing. The team worked the problem, and in the end they got it done. 

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Marnie Jo Zirbel Talks CTDs

Marine Technician Marnie Jo Zirbel explains the ins and outs of CTD sampling and why this type of sampling helps validate instruments in the water. Marnie is aboard the R/V Sikuliaq as it winds up the Endurance 18 expedition.

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Biofouled!

After six months in the northeast Pacific, the mooring components become habitat for marine life. In science terms, the moorings become “biofouled” and will need to be cleaned before the next deployment.

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Onto Recovery

Today, Day 3 of Leg 2 of Endurance 18, was a mooring recovery day aboard the R/V Sikuliaq. After spending six months in the ocean, the moorings have become biofouled and will need to be cleaned before the next deployment.  

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Three Deployments

The Endurance 18 team deployed three moorings today– two inshore, one offshore– off the coast of Oregon.  The weather cooperated. It was a beautiful sunny day for the deployments as evidence in the pictures that follow.

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First Time at Sea

Olana Costa is a UNOLS (University-National Oceanographic Laboratory System) cruise volunteer.  In this short video she describes her experience during her first day at sea aboard the R/V Sikuliaq for the second leg of Endurance 18.

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And So It Begins Again

  First morning of Endurance 18 Leg 2. The team deployed the Oregon Shelf Surface Mooring (CEO2SHSM) off the Oregon coast. More data for better science.

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